2004 Honda Civic Stalling/Jerking
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I have a 2004 Honda Civic LX manual transmission. I have a stalling problem that started a month or two ago. My car will stall when stopped and in neutral or very low rpms. This only happens when the engine is warm. It also has a hard time starting back up. I have to crank it and gas it to get it started. At first it happened maybe every few days but the more I drive it, the more often it stalls. If I don't drive it for a few days it doesn't stall at all. My car drives perfectly otherwise and it gets even better gas mileage than before.
I had the timing belt and water pump done in Nov.
The cel was on when it first started happening. Autozone said it was p0497. So, I started cheap, replaced spark plugs and air filter, put in an expensive fuel system cleaner and cleaned the iacv and throttle body. Didn't work.
Got it checked out at a few different places that said it could be fuel pump, crankshaft, or the transmission isn't getting enough air and that it was throwing a cylinder 3 misfire code.
Took it to a Honda dealership that couldn't find any codes or get it to stall but there was a leak in the crankshaft seal and a lean fuel mixture. Said my problem was probably that the valves weren't fitting right when they expanded when they get warm.
So, got my crankshaft seal fixed and oil pan gasket (needed that too) and had the crankshaft sensor connectors fixed (they were corroded).
Now my car started randomly bucking/jerking. Happens at any speed, the rpms just randomly drop and the car lurches. Hasn't stalled yet but like I said, it's better when I haven't driven it for a few days. So, not sure if fixing the crankshaft connectors fixed the stalling issue. If anybody has any suggestions, that would be great.
I had the timing belt and water pump done in Nov.
The cel was on when it first started happening. Autozone said it was p0497. So, I started cheap, replaced spark plugs and air filter, put in an expensive fuel system cleaner and cleaned the iacv and throttle body. Didn't work.
Got it checked out at a few different places that said it could be fuel pump, crankshaft, or the transmission isn't getting enough air and that it was throwing a cylinder 3 misfire code.
Took it to a Honda dealership that couldn't find any codes or get it to stall but there was a leak in the crankshaft seal and a lean fuel mixture. Said my problem was probably that the valves weren't fitting right when they expanded when they get warm.
So, got my crankshaft seal fixed and oil pan gasket (needed that too) and had the crankshaft sensor connectors fixed (they were corroded).
Now my car started randomly bucking/jerking. Happens at any speed, the rpms just randomly drop and the car lurches. Hasn't stalled yet but like I said, it's better when I haven't driven it for a few days. So, not sure if fixing the crankshaft connectors fixed the stalling issue. If anybody has any suggestions, that would be great.
#2
If you think a good mechanic is expensive, try hiring a bad one
Re: 2004 Honda Civic Stalling/Jerking
and had the crankshaft sensor connectors fixed (they were corroded).
Now my car started randomly bucking/jerking.
Now my car started randomly bucking/jerking.
The P0497 should be unrelated to the issue above.
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#6
If you think a good mechanic is expensive, try hiring a bad one
Re: 2004 Honda Civic Stalling/Jerking
It's not jerking anymore but it's still stalling.
Idle relearn?
Would it have taken a few months to start stalling if it was a timing issue?
Not usually, it would have been apparent immediately.
If one of those engines is (cam timing) only one tooth off it may run a little bad. Once it gets to 2 or 3 teeth out of time, the computer should shut it down at about 2 seconds. Or maybe 10 seconds, Hell I can't remember now.
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Does it run poorly or just idle too low?
Idle relearn?
A few months?
Not usually, it would have been apparent immediately.
If one of those engines is (cam timing) only one tooth off it may run a little bad. Once it gets to 2 or 3 teeth out of time, the computer should shut it down at about 2 seconds. Or maybe 10 seconds, Hell I can't remember now.
Idle relearn?
A few months?
Not usually, it would have been apparent immediately.
If one of those engines is (cam timing) only one tooth off it may run a little bad. Once it gets to 2 or 3 teeth out of time, the computer should shut it down at about 2 seconds. Or maybe 10 seconds, Hell I can't remember now.
#8
If you think a good mechanic is expensive, try hiring a bad one
Re: 2004 Honda Civic Stalling/Jerking
Yeah, got the timing done in Nov and it didn't start stalling until February. It runs absolutely great, idle and everything. Just randomly when I'm stopped and the engine is warm, the engine will just shut off. Almost like it stalled but won't make a noise or anything.
#9
Re: 2004 Honda Civic Stalling/Jerking
Yeah, got the timing done in Nov and it didn't start stalling until February. It runs absolutely great, idle and everything. Just randomly when I'm stopped and the engine is warm, the engine will just shut off. Almost like it stalled but won't make a noise or anything.
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